Revue: | Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz |
Base de datos: | PERIÓDICA |
Número de sistema: | 000452436 |
ISSN: | 0074-0276 |
Autores: | Rojas de Arias, Antonieta1 Monroy, Carlota2 Guhl, Felipe3 Sosa Estani, Sergio4 Santos, Walter Souza6 Abad Franch, Fernando7 |
Instituciones: | 1Centro para el Desarrollo de la Investigación Científica, Asunción. Paraguay 2Universidad de San Carlos, Laboratorio de Entomología y Parasitología Aplicadas, Ciudad de Guatemala. Guatemala 3Universidad de los Andes, Facultad de Ciencias, Bogotá. Colombia 4Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Centro de Investigaciones en Epidemiología y Salud Pública, Buenos Aires. Argentina 5Ministério da Saude, Instituto Evandro Chagas, Ananindeua, Para. Brasil 6Universidade de Brasilia, Faculdade de Medicina, Brasilia, Distrito Federal. Brasil |
Año: | 2022 |
Volumen: | 117 |
País: | Brasil |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Tipo de documento: | Artículo |
Enfoque: | Analítico, descriptivo |
Resumen en inglés | Chagas disease (CD) still imposes a heavy burden on most Latin American countries. Vector-borne and mother-to-child transmission cause several thousand new infections per year, and at least 5 million people carry Trypanosoma cruzi. Access to diagnosis and medical care, however, is far from universal. Starting in the 1990s, CD-endemic countries and the Pan American Health Organization-World Health Organization (PAHO-WHO) launched a series of multinational initiatives for CD control-surveillance. An overview of the initiatives’ aims, achievements, and challenges reveals some key common themes that we discuss here in the context of the WHO 2030 goals for CD. Transmission of T. cruzi via blood transfusion and organ transplantation is effectively under control. T. cruzi, however, is a zoonotic pathogen with 100+ vector species widely spread across the Americas; interrupting vector-borne transmission seems therefore unfeasible. Stronger surveillance systems are, and will continue to be, needed to monitor and control CD. Prevention of vertical transmission demands boosting current efforts to screen pregnant and childbearing-aged women. Finally, integral patient care is a critical unmet need in most countries. The decades-long experience of the initiatives, in sum, hints at the practical impossibility of interrupting vector-borne T. cruzi transmission in the Americas. The concept of disease control seems to provide a more realistic description of what can in effect be achieved by 2030 |
Disciplinas: | Medicina |
Palabras clave: | Salud pública, Enfermedad de Chagas, Control de enfermedades, Vigilancia sanitaria, Mecanismos de infección |
Keyword: | Public health, Chagas disease, Health surveillance, Disease control, Infection mechanisms |
Texte intégral: | Texto completo (Ver HTML) Texto completo (Ver PDF) |